Biocatalytic reactions in living cells involve complex transformations in the spatially confined microenvironments. Inspired by biological transformation processes, we demonstrate effective biocatalytic cascade driven photodynamic therapy in tumor-bearing mice by the integration of an artificial enzyme (ultrasmall Au nanoparticles) with upconversion nanoparticles (NaYF4@NaYb0.92F4Er0.08@NaYF4)zirconium/iron porphyrin metal-organic framework core-shell nanoparticles (UMOF NPs) which act as biocatalysts and nanoreactors. The construction of core-shell UMOF NPs are realized by using a unique "solvent-assisted self-assembly" method. The integration of ultrasmall AuNPs on the UMOFs matrix leads to glucose depletion, providing Au-mediated cancer therapy via glucose oxidase like catalytic activity. Meanwhile, the UMOF matrix acts as a near-infrared (NIR) light photon-activated singlet oxygen generator through a continuous supply of oxygen via hydrogen peroxide decomposition upon irradiation. Such kinds of biocatalysts offer exciting opportunities for biomedical, catalytical ,and energy applications.Real-time imaging of immunoactivation is imperative for cancer immunotherapy and drug discovery; however, most existing imaging agents possess "always-on" signals and thus have poor signal correlation with immune responses. Herein, renal-clearable near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent macromolecular reporters are synthesized to specifically detect an immunoactivation-related biomarker (granzyme B) for real-time evaluation of cancer immunotherapy. Composed of a peptide-caged NIR signaling moiety linked with a hydrophilic poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) passivation chain, the reporters not only specifically activate their fluorescence by granzyme B but also passively target the tumor of living mice after systemic administration. Such granzyme B induced in vivo signals of the reporters are validated to correlate well with the populations of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CD8+) and T helper (CD4+) cells detected in tumor tissues. By virtue of their ideal renal clearance efficiency (60% injected doses at 24 h postinjection), the reporters can be used for optical urinalysis of immunoactivation simply by detecting the status of excreted reporters. This study thus proposes a molecular optical imaging approach for noninvasive evaluation of cancer immunotherapeutic efficacy in living animals.The elucidation of magnetostructural correlations between bridging ligand substitution and strength of magnetic coupling is essential to the development of high-temperature molecule-based magnetic materials. Toward this end, we report the series of tetraoxolene-bridged FeII2 complexes [(Me3TPyA)2Fe2(RL)]n+ (Me3TPyA = tris(6-methyl-2-pyridylmethyl)amine; n = 2 OMeLH2 = 3,6-dimethoxy-2,5-dihydroxo-1,4-benzoquinone, ClLH2 = 3,6-dichloro-2,5-dihydroxo-1,4-benzoquinone, Na2[NO2L] = sodium 3,6-dinitro-2,5-dihydroxo-1,4-benzoquinone; n = 4 SMe2L = 3,6-bis(dimethylsulfonium)-2,5-dihydroxo-1,4-benzoquinone diylide) and their one-electron-reduced analogues. Variable-temperature dc magnetic susceptibility data reveal the presence of weak ferromagnetic superexchange between FeII centers in the oxidized species, with exchange constants of J = +1.2(2) (R = OMe, Cl) and +0.3(1) (R = NO2, SMe2) cm-1. In contrast, X-ray diffraction, cyclic voltammetry, and Mössbauer spectroscopy establish a ligand-centered radical in the reduced complexes. Magnetic measurements for the radical-bridged species reveal the presence of strong antiferromagnetic metal-radical coupling, with J = -57(10), -60(7), -58(6), and -65(8) cm-1 for R = OMe, Cl, NO2, and SMe2, respectively. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/biricodar.html The minimal effects of substituents in the 3- and 6-positions of RLx-? on the magnetic coupling strength is understood through electronic structure calculations, which show negligible spin density on the substituents and associated C atoms of the ring. Finally, the radical-bridged complexes are single-molecule magnets, with relaxation barriers of Ueff = 50(1), 41(1), 38(1), and 33(1) cm-1 for R = OMe, Cl, NO2, and SMe2, respectively. Taken together, these results provide the first examination of how bridging ligand substitution influences magnetic coupling in semiquinoid-bridged compounds, and they establish design criteria for the synthesis of semiquinoid-based molecules and materials.The origin of the self-activated luminescence in the apatite-type M5(PO4)3X (MPOX; M = Sr or Ba; X = Cl or Br) samples and the spectral assignment for cerium-doped Sr5(PO4)3Cl (SPOC) phosphors are determined from first-principles methods combined with hybrid density functional theory (DFT) calculations, using the standard PBE0 hybrid functional, with wave function-based embedded-cluster ab initio calculations (at the CASSCF/CASPT2/RASSI-SO level). Electronic structure calculations are performed in order to accurately derive the band gaps of the hosts, the locations of impurity states in the energy bands that are caused by native defects and doped Ce3+ ions, and the charge-compensation mechanisms of aliovalent doping. The calculations of defect formation energies under O-poor conditions demonstrate that the native defects are easily generated in the undoped MPOX samples prepared under reducing atmospheres, from which thermodynamic and optical transition energy levels, as well as the corresponding energies, are derived in order to interpret the luminescence mechanisms of the undoped MPOX as previously reported. Our calculations reveal that the self-activated luminescence is mainly attributed to the optical transitions of the excitons bound to the oxygen vacancies (VO), along with their transformation of the charge states 0 ? 1+. Furthermore, the eight excitation bands observed in the synchrotron radiation excitation spectra of SPOC Ce3+, Na+ phosphors are successfully assigned according to the ab initio calculated energies and relative oscillator strengths of the 4f1 → 5d1-5 transitions for the Ce3+ ions at both the Sr(1) and Sr(2) sites in the host. It is hoped that the feasible first-principles approaches in this work are applied in order to explore the origins of the luminescence in undoped and lanthanide-doped phosphors, complementing the experiments from the perspective of chemical compositions and the microstructures of materials.